We sampled potential food items of American Flamingos (Phoenicopterus ruber ruber) in the Celestun Estuary, Yucatan, Mexico, from October 1992 to January 1993, to explore the influence of food density and distribution on flamingo behavior in relation to the ideal free distribution model. Food items were found in the substrate and vegetation and were dominated by four groups: gastropods (40%), muskgrass bulbils (26%), crustaceans (11%),and chironomids(10%). Overall, food was patchily distributed and food abundance decreased over time. Flocks initially concentrated in areas where food was most abundant, but appeared to deplete food resources in these areas after which they dispersed throughout the Celestun Estuary. Time spent feeding also was fewer in the first two time blacks ((x) over bar = 26%) when food was most abundant, and then increased and remained constant (56%) in the remaining five time blocks. Mean flock size was 457, and did not differ among locations through time, except in the last time block when flocks tended to be larger ((x) over bar = 821). We concluded that the distribution of flamingo Becks was consistent with the ideal free model based on food density and distribution, but that major perturbations (storms) can dramatically affect flamingo distribution. However, relative payoff for individuals within flocks has yet to be determined.